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In The Longest Race, the author writes specifically about running the JFK 50 Mile race of November 2001 at the age of 60, just nine weeks after the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Thoughts of 9/11, weapons of war, religious belief, international relations, scientific advances, pacificism, the environment, the human body, optimal footwear, the Olympics brand, and much more, are all interconnected in The Longest Race – a personal account of long-distance running and the author’s thoughts on the prospect of endurance of the human race. (There’s plenty of insight on how best to approach the sport and the author does include helpful tips at the end, but The Longest Race is definitely not intended to be a how-to book about ultramarathon racing.) (Posted on February 16, 2013)
Would you recommend this product to a friend? Definitely yes
The Longest Race / Ed Ayres
“…An ultramarathon, run by a master of the sport, becomes a metaphor for the race for human sustainability we are all running.” ~Shelf Awareness (Julia Jenkins
“Audiobook narrator Richard Waterhouse does an excellent job reading The Longest Race, although he sounds much younger than age sixty himself. He places the right amount of emotion on the author’s writing, which ranges from lightly humorous to seriously contemplative without trying to add a false element of suspense or drama to the details of the race itself (which was run over ten years ago, after all.) The Longest Race would make a great audiobook to listen to while on a long run (not allowed on the JFK 50 Mile, though) or a fascinating book to read while resting at home after a long run. You definitely don’t have to be training for your own ultramarathon; non-runners or former runners can enjoy it as a memoir along the lines of Bill Bryson, but more serious.” ~Bay State Reader’s Advisory




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